Editors' Review

The bottom line:
Chrome for Android provides the missing mobile piece for Chrome addicts. Watch out for that brain freeze, though: it's only for Ice Cream Sandwich.

Review:
Google sure took its sweet time getting its redonkulously popular browser onto its well-received mobile operating system, but there's finally a version of Chrome for Android. It comes with a number of caveats, the biggest being that there's a really good chance that you're not going to have a compatible device for a while.

Installation
Chrome for Android installs like any other Android app, and is freely available from Google's Android Market, Download.com, Amazon, and other Android marketplaces. If you have more than one Google account synced, it will ask you which one you want to associate with it. You can choose not to sync it, but then you'll be missing out on one of the browser's best features: the ability to instantly share bookmarks, open tabs, and browsing history across your desktop and mobile devices.

A more noticeable tarnish on Chrome for Android is that it only works with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich. There's a reason for this that we'll get into, but this will no doubt have a chilling effect on Chrome's Android adoption.

Chrome for Android also takes up 48.36MB of disk space when installed, and that's before adding in any synced information. By comparison, Firefox for Android, which uses a different engine to drive it, takes up only around 15MB before throwing in sync data. Of course, app size doesn't mean as much as it did when Android was younger, but it's still a notable indicator that Chrome is rough around the edges.

Interface
Chrome for Android is decked out in digital threads that any desktop Chrome users ought to feel instantly comfortable in. Like its desktop site, Chrome for Android is sparing and minimalist.

It's also got two slightly different looks. The phone version includes a tab button just to the right of the location bar, which allows you to check out your open tabs. The tablet version doesn't have the button because it has so much more screen real estate. Tabs on tablets appear identical to the ones on the desktop version, complete with an onscreen star icon for quick favoriting, and a microphone icon so you can talk to the browser. This is a clever bridge between low-powered tablets and high-powered laptops.

Also on the toolbar is an ICS-styled icon for the options menu. If you're not familiar with ICS--and who could blame you, given that it's on only four devices more than three months after its release--the options menu is three small square boxes arranged vertically. From it, you can launch a new tab, a tab in Incognito mode, or access the browser settings.

As with the desktop version, the location bar does double-duty displaying your URL and as a dedicated search box. Much like Chrome for desktops, the Android version simplicity belies what the browser can actually do.

Features and support
Chrome for Android brings most of Chrome's desktop features to the mobile operating system. Of course, it's not the first to do so. Firefox, Opera, Dolphin, and others have brought their A-game, and the mobile browser wars are about to make the desktop ones look like patty-cake.

Let's start with what Chrome for Android does. It appears to sync like a boss. If you're into Firefox's sync, you'll find an equally instantaneous experience here. Bookmarks, open tabs, Web address autocomplete suggestions, and browsing history will all find their way quickly to your Android, if you associate a Google account with the browser. However, it's not a prerequisite for using it. Password syncing is expected in a future update, but hasn't it arrived in beta 1.

Rebooting our device appeared to break the sync connection for open tabs, and we've heard reports of the feature not transferring open tabs at all for others. This isn't entirely surprising, since the browser is in beta, but it's something to keep an eye out for. Sync also appears to be one-way at this point, so while you can get your desktop tabs, bookmarks, and history on your Android, it won't go in the other direction just yet.

Another sync-related feature that's expected, because the browser has a Settings option for it, but hasn't made it to the public is a Chrome to Phone option that will allow you to send a specific site directly to your Android device.

Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich offers a lot of new hotness to users, but one of the less apparent improvements is hardware acceleration APIs. These hooks let apps run faster by leveraging graphics processing toward app performance, and Chrome for Android makes great use of them. A single flick against the screen will send the page rapidly scrolling up or down, great for those lengthy vertical sites. Holding down your finger on one edge of the screen and dragging it across will switch tabs, another place where hardware acceleration comes into play. You can also see it in effect when playing a video and using pinch to zoom--we detected no loss in the stream while zooming around or scrolling.

Google's also brought in its site precaching. As you start typing into the location bar, the first option at the top of the list will be predownloaded, so that if you select that site it will appear to render nearly instantaneously. It's on for Wi-Fi connections only by default, although you can go into Settings and turn it on for mobile data.

When you tap the tabs button, you can swipe through your open tabs with the same gesture you use to swipe away notifications. It's a very intuitive, natural way to navigate through your tabs. Tap a page to expand it to full size.

Chrome for Android also offers Incognito mode, which turns off browsing tracks such as history, cached images, and cookies. Be aware, of course, that just because the browser isn't leaving tracks on your phone doesn't mean that your carrier can't see where you've been surfing. You can launch an Incognito tab from the Settings menu, which then opens in a new window. A button will appear that lets you switch between the Incognito stack and the regular Chrome stack of tabs.

One clever tool for developers lets them remotely debug Web sites that don't work in Chrome for Android on their PCs. A command on the PC will open the mobile browser's Web pages for scrutiny.

The browser doesn't have it all, though. Adobe Flash player isn't supported, which means that all streaming video you want to watch must be done on HTML5-compliant sites. Also, add-ons are not supported. But basically, despite being in beta, this is a fairly usable browser and anybody on ICS ought to check it out.

Performance
When it comes to page-rendering times, Chrome for Android feels comparable with the desktop version. It's fast and responsive, and is definitely worthy of the Chrome name on the performance front.

Because it's in beta and subject to rapid changes, we're reluctant to take it through a full battery of tests. We noticed occasional problems, such as very rare crashes and problems with overlapping characters on extremely close zooms. For a first beta, though, this is mightily impressive.

Conclusion
The browser's real performance problem isn't one of performance at all, but one of availability. The fact that 99 percent of Androids out there can't run Google's own browser speaks more to the problems that Google is currently having with mobile carriers than problems inherent in Chrome. At the end of the day, though, the statistics indicate that you won't be using Chrome for Android. You're not even going to get a chance to try Chrome for Android until it's probably out of beta, and that's a real shame because mobile browsers just got a whole lot more competitive.

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Publisher's Description

The speed and simplicity of Chrome, now on your Android phone and tablet.

Browse fast on your Android smartphone or tablet, and bring your personalized Chrome experience with you anywhere you go. Chrome for Android is available, initially in Beta, on Android 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich. To check if it is available in your country, please visit: http://goo.gl/6ARvc

Features:

- Browse fast with accelerated page loading, scrolling, and zooming

- Search and navigate directly from the omnibox

- Open and switch between unlimited tabs in an easy-to-view stack

- Sign in to Chrome to sync your bookmarks and view tabs you have open on your computer

- Send pages from desktop Chrome to your smartphone or tablet with one click and read them on the go, even if you're offline

Fast (if it can load the content you want to see). Some thoughtful interface designs and features.

Cons

No flash capability, which is one of Android's few advantages over iOS. For example, when streaming an audio feed, the default browser has a better interface and is much more capable.

Summary

Chrome for Android's biggest selling point is its novelty. If you're an early adopter and curious tech enthusiast, then check it out. For substantive capability that works the first time, though, you will find yourself copying URLs from Chrome into the stock browser because the stock browser is so much more capable, esp when it comes to Flash and sites with rich content.

For all you delusional hipsters who say Flash is obsolete, the reality is that as of 2012, lack of Flash will give you lots of blank space. True, maybe that giant log shouldn't be in the freeway. But it's there. So, you can live by the-world-shouldn't-to-be-that-way delusion and slam your car into it at 70mph. Or, react to things as they are and deal with the log instead of ignoring it. Flash may or may not get phased out, but as of now, you'll be censored from accessing enormous volumes of content without Flash.

Syncing of bookmarks. Syncing of tabs that are open in Chrome on your desktop or laptop.

Very slick user interface. You gotta try it.

Google promises rapid iteration (6 weeks between updates). Six months from now you won't recognize this software.

Cons

Only runs on ICS devices. Doesn't support Flash. But Chrome for Android is about the future, not the past.

Summary

This software makes a very compelling case for the future of the mobile web. It's easy to imagine how with the widespread availability of browsers like Chrome that mobile web will really give the idea of platform-specific app a run for its money.

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